Marietta, GA: Agape Christian Martial Arts of Atlanta

Ninja Taijutsu is a scientific defense system first developed in 1100’s Japan by farmer families, a caste who had virtually no rights in that day’s imperial society. These families suffered at the hands of local lords (Daimyo), who often subjugated their goods, lands, and sometimes even family members. The farmers needed ways to defend themselves. Through hard work and fortuitous connections, they developed a powerful means of self defense.

Taijutsu is cited by many scholars as being the foundation from which all martial arts styles developed.

I'd like to see a list of these "scholars" sometime.

It is generally also assessed that the deterioration of many modern systems into simple recreation or stylized sport stems from the removal of Taijutsu, the nucleus means for overcoming larger, more powerful, and more aggressive assailants. Ninja Taijutsu retains the true bugei (martial) training that was critical during the days when daily survival depended on real self defense capability.

It isn't sports that are stylized, it's the non-sports. Becuase looking good while doing a wrist-lock is how performance is measured. Unfortunately no evidence has surfaced that the average practitioner of "taijutsu" can handle a larger, stronger opponent.

Following Japan’s famous warring states (Sengoku) period, fighting ceased to a great degree. Numerous true warrior systems were soon lost, but Ninja Taijutsu survived through individuals who dedicated their lives to study and preservation. The Taijutsu systems that remain historically traceable collectively employ eighteen martial disciplines such as unarmed combat, evasive body movement, and stealth methods.

Another common theme in "traditional" martial arts circles. Martial arts used to be t3h r34l d34dl0r but fell from grace. Only <insert style here> is keeping it real.

Today, Ninja receive an incorrect reputation based on the Hollywood treatment of "ninjutsu",

No, the incorrect reputation comes from the so-called "ninjas" themselves.

Because of our fascination with the ninja warrior, many unscrupulous martial arts schools claim "Ninjutsu” expertise while having absolutely no real knowledge. True ninja taijutsu training only originates from the teachings of the Bujinkan and Stephen K. Hayes.

well, one good thing...

OK, a few good things I'll give them a little credit for:

* Posting their prices on their Web site. -1 McDojo factor.
* Use of Stegosaurus as a mascot for their kids program. I like dinosaurs.
* Decent site design. Not great, but several grades better than the average Web crap we see courtesy of Mullet Town.

No discernible links to the Bujinkan (as in it barely mentions it, and doesn't even link to teh Hombu). However, there is a bunch of stuff that could quickly be grabbed from a few books, and listed incorrectly. Recommends reading of Stephen K. Hayes books, yet nothing about Hatsumi's writings.